Our Sustainability Vision

In 2019, we published our Global Sustainability Statement. In keeping with our commitment to transparency, we are now publishing the first GHG and Materials Assessment findings of 12 Condé Nast markets.

With a clear understanding of our environmental performance across our operations, we developed our first five-year sustainability strategy (2020 – 2025) confirming our intention to to drive innovation and actionable change inside our organization, across the fashion and publishing industries and beyond.

Additionally, we’re one of the first publishing companies to begin accounting for the environmental footprint of our digital value chain, including emissions of digital content consumption.

Our Commitments

Our first five-year sustainability strategy (2020 – 2025) is structured in three phases, which involve incremental improvements across four key areas:

Reducing our emissions and offsetting when reduction is not possible. We aim to achieve carbon neutrality by 2030, starting with a 20% reduction in corporate emissions and 10% reduction in supply chain by the end of 2021.

Encouraging partners across our supply chain to foster a more sustainable publishing sector.

Identifying and using more sustainable materials across our production process. We will transition to 100% internationally certified paper by the end of 2021 and will eliminate all fossil-based, non-recyclable plastic packaging from publications across 12 Condé Nast markets by 2025.

Championing a more sustainable corporate culture while informing and inspiring our audiences. We aim for our brands to be recognised as leading advocates for sustainability, setting higher standards for reporting on issues of climate change and sustainable fashion.

To meet our commitments and ensure tangible, long lasting change in the way we operate, we aim to fully embed our sustainability strategy within our key business processes. To achieve this necessary change, we have identified four key focus areas where we see the need for transformation over the next five years.

Our approach is based on incremental changes and improvements over three phases:

Phase One: We will work to establish a foundation for our sustainability transformation across all business functions and operations; set public targets and develop a structured reporting process for accountability and delivery while integrating sustainability considerations into daily workflow.

Phase Two: Aim to integrate sustainability best practice processes across business functions such as procurement and print production, while increasing our sustainability ambitions.

Phase Three: Continue to lead by example, setting industry agenda and identifying high-level, effective opportunities for change and innovation in the fashion and publishing industries.

Ambitions for Phase One

1. Reducing emissionsCondé Nast will aim to reach carbon neutrality by 2030 by reducing our emissions and offsetting when reduction is not possible. We will also work closely with our suppliers to ensure a reduction of emissions across our supply chain while simultaneously reducing our corporate emissions by 20%.

Prepare for supply chain transformation and transition to more sustainable materials

3. Using more sustainable materialsImprove the sustainability credentials of materials we use in our production process, ensuring we consider and adopt high-performing alternative materials while encouraging licensees to adopt similar standards.

4. Becoming a voice for changeFirmly position Condé Nast and its brands as leading advocates for sustainability, with industry peers and audiences while strengthening expertise at corporate and editorial levels to further enhance our credibility and authority as a trusted voice in the public sustainability debate.

Key Actions:

Launch of a global employee council for sustainability to champion corporate culture change across our markets

The objective of the assessment was to establish a robust baseline to inform our carbon mitigation targets. To ensure that our baseline is comprehensive, we looked at the following elements of our corporate facilities and supply chain:

Corporate:

All fuels and refrigerants used directly by Condé Nast corporate offices facilities.

All purchased electricity used in Condé Nast corporate office facilities.

The impacts of business travel, including air and road travels, as well as hotel stays.

Supply Chain:

Printed products including cradle-to-gate emissions associated with paper used (forest management, wood transport, pulp and paper-making, paper transport), emissions associated with production (printing, finishing) and emissions associated with distribution of the finished product (via subscriptions, newsstand, and other routes).

Digital media, including emissions produced by content distribution across networks, and emissions from the devices used by readers to consume content published across Condé Nast’s digital properties.

Condé Nast GHG Emissions

In 2018, Condé Nast generated a GHG emission of approximately 341,233 tons of carbon dioxide equivalents (CO2e). While the majority of the GHG footprint was emitted from our supply chain, there is also room for improvement within our supply chain and corporate offices.

Electricity consumption is our largest direct source of corporate emissions, while air travel accounts for the largest indirect source of corporate emissions. In answer to this, Condé Nast will prioritize reducing corporate emissions by introducing energy efficiency programs and optimizing the use of virtual meeting infrastructure.

Print production and circulation are the largest source of our supply chain footprint. To minimize the impact of our supply chain and begin reducing emissions, we intend to assess all supplier sustainability credentials and collaborate with our key paper suppliers, printers and distribution partners to improve their environmental footprint. Below is an overview of our GHG emissions across 12 Condé Nast markets and our total emissions for 2018.

GHG Emissions Assessment Methodology

We follow the Greenhouse Gas Protocols established by the World Business Council for Sustainable Development and the World Resources Institute. They are a set of internationally-accepted standards for GHG accounting and reporting. In Condé Nast’s first GHG assessment, the Corporate Accounting and Reporting Standard (Scope One and Two) and the Corporate Value Chain (Scope Three) are applied. This internationally-recognized approach allows Condé Nast to assess our entire value chain emissions impact and identify where to focus reduction activities. The results and analysis of GHG assessment have informed our first sustainability strategy and our preliminary emission reduction target setting.

Assumptions & Limitations

Corporate:
Emissions related to green electricity certificates, Condé Nast events and licensed businesses are not included in the scope of our first cross-market GHG assessment. The goal of the first assessment was to quantify the GHG emissions of our core value chains and to establish a baseline. We will continue to evaluate our reporting boundaries and consider inclusions of other business segments in our future assessments.

Supply Chain:
It has been assumed that 100% of unsolds arising in the newsstand supply chain are diverted to material recycling. In this case, the GHG emissions associated with the reprocessing of the fiber (sorting, repulping/de-inking etc) are allocated to the lifecycle of subsequent product supply chains and are therefore not included in Condé Nast’s GHG inventory. This approach is known as a “cut-off approach” and is used extensively in lifecycle thinking of the print publishing industry.

For post-consumer magazines, it is also likely that a high proportion of these are sent for recycling, as magazines are potentially a source of high-quality recovered fibers. However, data is not available for all of our markets, and therefore this assumption may be a limitation in the overall analysis, which could be further improved in the future.

Materials Usage

Understanding Condé Nast’s Paper And Plastic Consumption

At Condé Nast we are proud of the initial steps we have taken to improve the sustainability of the paper and plastic packaging we use, but we acknowledge there’s still work to be done.

Over 96% of the 35,000 tons of paper we used in 2018 was internationally certified. Our goal is to reach 100% by the end of 2021. We have made strides towards transitioning to 100% fully certified paper via the Programme for the Endorsement of Forest Certification (PEFC) and Forest Stewardship Council (FSC). FSC and PEFC certification guarantees the sustainable management of forests that safeguards and preserves biological diversity, regeneration and indigenous land rights. The economic viability and social benefits of those who rely on the industry, as well as chain of custody assurance, is also taken into account to ensure products are environmentally and socially responsible for the market.

In 2018, Condé Nast used approximately 440 tons of single-use plastic in magazine packaging. Acknowledging the negative impact of fossil-based, non-recyclable plastics (i.e. single-use plastic wraps) on the environment, in 2019 we committed to phasing out these plastics from our publications across our owned operations by 2025, in line with our pledge to the Ellen MacArthur Foundation New Plastics Economy Global Commitment.

We have already made good progress on this commitment and are on track to eliminate 50% of single use plastic packaging by the end of Phase One (2018 baseline), with 10 out of 12 markets already testing alternative packaging materials and solutions.

We will continue to monitor progress and report annually on our efforts to eliminate problematic plastic from our packaging.

Methodology and Materiality Analysis

The materiality principle is at the core of Condé Nast’s five-year sustainability approach, which enables our global operations to prioritize actions with the most significant impact. The aim is to identify key sustainability challenges and opportunities throughout our entire value chain.

The methodology examines the challenges and opportunities most relevant to our company through reviews of the international and national regulatory landscape, peers and industry trends and consultation with a diverse mix of external and internal stakeholders. The four priority areas outlined above — including reducing emissions, engaging suppliers, using more sustainable materials and becoming a voice for change — were identified in this way.

The feasibility of various actions, along with our markets’ ability to quickly pilot them, was also taken into consideration as actions were prioritized over a five-year horizon. The strategy framework encompasses both corporate and editorial divisions: covering corporate office operations, print and digital value chains, creation of editorial and communications content, events and licensing.

Looking forward

At Condé Nast we are uniquely positioned to drive real transformation across the publishing, media and fashion industries. We will continue to monitor, adapt and improve the way we operate as a business to meet our environmental ambitions and inspire our audiences, peers and employees to take positive climate action.